Mel Brooks, original name Melvin Kaminsky (born June 28, 1926, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.) American film and television director, producer, writer, and actor whose motion pictures elevated outrageousness and vulgarity to high comic art.

Mel Brooks, 2003.

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Early life and work

Brooks was an accomplished mimic, pianist, and drummer by the time he graduated from high school and enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1944. As part of his assignment to the Army Specialized Training Program, he received instruction at the Virginia Military Institute. After serving as a combat engineer in Europe during World War II, he became a professional entertainer, working as a stand-up comic, an emcee, and a social director at resorts in the Catskill Mountains (the so-called Borscht Belt). In 1949 he joined the writing staff for The Admiral Broadway Revue, a weekly television series starring Sid Caesar. Brooks remained with Caesar until 1958, contributing material to the comedian’s subsequent TV efforts, most memorably to the landmark comedy series Your Show of Shows (1950–54) as part of a writing staff that included Carl Reiner, Neil Simon, and Larry Gelbart. Additionally, Brooks collaborated on the librettos for the musicals Shinbone Alley (1957) and All American (1962).

As a performer, Brooks came to prominence in 1960 when he teamed with Reiner (who acted as an interviewer) to bring to life “The 2,000 Year Old Man,” a mostly improvised bit that the duo performed in television appearances and on best-selling comedy record albums. Brooks entered the motion picture industry as the writer and narrator of the Academy Award-winning animated short The Critic (1963), a devastating lampoon of avant-garde films. He and Buck Henry then created Get Smart (1965–70), a television situation comedy spoofing the espionage genre popularized by the James Bond films.

First films

All this was but a prelude to his auspicious feature-film directorial debut, The Producers (1968), which was not a major success at the box office, even though Brooks’s screenplay won an Academy Award. In The Producers, Zero Mostel starred as a financially troubled stage producer who teams with his accountant (played by Gene Wilder) to purposefully oversell shares in their upcoming production to investors. With the pro-NazimusicalSpringtime for Hitler, they hope to create a production so obviously bad and offensive that it will quickly bomb and close, allowing them to abscond with the investors’ money. To their horror, they end up with a hit. Despite its initial poor showing at the box office and a mixed response from critics, the film had some ardent champions, including actor Peter Sellers, and Brooks won an Academy Award for his screenplay.

Moreover, with the passage of time, The Producers became a cult favourite and was eventually widely lauded as one of the greatest comedies ever made. Its celebrated centrepiece, an absurdly upbeat Busby Berkeley-like musical number (“Springtime for Hitler”), and Dick Shawn’s bohemian portrayal of the play-within-the-movie’s protagonist, Adolf Hitler, both typified Brooks’s comedic approach as they shockingly defied audience expectations. Brooks, whose artistic sensibility had largely been shaped by his sense of being an outsider as a Jew in mainstream American society, boldly put the ultimate villain of Jewish history, Hitler, at the heart of his comedy and transformed him into a clown. In so doing, he embodied the approach to comedy (and, more specifically, to parody) that film historian Gerald Mast called the “anomalous surprise”—the interjection of a character, a situation, or an event that makes no sense given the context. Brooks would return to this approach again and again throughout his career as a filmmaker.

Brooks followed The Producers with another broad comedy, The Twelve Chairs (1970), that was set in newly communist Russia and concerned a trove of jewels hidden inside a dining-chair leg. A priest, an aristocrat, and a confidence man vie to be the first to discover them, to great comic effect, though the film was little seen.

Films of the 1970s

It was with his third directorial effort, Blazing Saddles (1974), that Brooks cemented his reputation as Hollywood’s foremost purveyor of hilarious tastelessness. He collaborated with writer-director Andrew Bergman and stand-up comedian-actor Richard Pryor, among others, on the script for this uninhibited burlesque of the western genre, the comic targets of which ranged from racial prejudice to flatulence. Its stellar cast included Wilder, Cleavon Little, Harvey Korman, Slim Pickens, and Madeline Kahn, who earned an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actress for her parody of Marlene Dietrich’s saloon singer in the classic western Destry Rides Again (1939). The film reaped a fortune at the box office and earned Brooks another Academy Award nomination, this one for best original song (“I’m Tired”).

Equally popular was his next film, a broad but affectionate parody of the Universal horror films of the 1930s titled Young Frankenstein (1974), which earned Brooks and the film’s star and cowriter, Wilder, an Academy Award nomination for best screenplay. Young Frankenstein was more carefully structured than Blazing Saddles, and its elegant black-and-white cinematography replicated the look of the 1935 Bride of Frankenstein. Brooks reined in his more anarchic impulses (though his trademark lewd jokes are abundant), and many critics found the result more sophisticated than Blazing Saddles, which had been released less than a year previously.

Less successful was Silent Movie (1976), in which Brooks himself starred as a washed-up director who persuades the head of a motion-picture studio (played by Caesar) to make a silent picture. Without dialogue and loaded with sight gags, Silent Movie was less a spoof than an affectionate homage to the Mack Sennett-directed comedies of the silent era. High Anxiety (1977) was a more centred parody, with the films of Alfred Hitchcock as its target. Brooks again starred, this time as a psychiatrist whose life is put in jeopardy when he goes to work at the Psycho-Neurotic Institute for the Very, Very Nervous (the staff of which includes a sinister pair played by Cloris Leachman and Korman).

Films of the 1980s and 1990s

Despite the presence of Korman, Leachman, and several other fine actors who were members of the loose ensemble that appeared in Brooks’s films, including Kahn and Caesar, History of the World—Part I (1981) was poorly received by most critics and at the box office. Similarly disappointing were Spaceballs (1987), a takeoff on the Star Wars series, and Life Stinks (1991). Brooks then directed Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993), a send-up of Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991), in which Kevin Costner had starred (and was generally maligned) as the legendary outlaw hero. Brooks’s final motion picture as a director was the unremarkable Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995).

Work as producer and actor

As founder of Brooksfilms, an independent moviemaking concern, Brooks also engaged in a parallel career as an executive producer of serious “quality” films, including The Elephant Man (1980), Frances (1982, uncredited), and 84 Charing Cross Road (1987), the last of which starred his second wife, Anne Bancroft, whom he married in 1964. Brooks costarred with Bancroft in To Be or Not to Be (1983), a remake of the Ernst Lubitsch-directed film of the same name. His work as an actor also included regular appearances on the popular TV sitcom Mad About You in the late 1990s and a guest stint on the HBO series Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Brooks made a spectacular comeback in 2001 as producer, composer, and librettist of the hugely popular Tony Award-winning Broadway stage musical based on The Producers. He followed this in 2007 with a Broadway musical based on Young Frankenstein. Brooks was named a Kennedy Center honoree in 2009 for his contributions to American comedy.

Britannica Web sites

(born 1926). American film and television director, producer, writer, and actor Mel Brooks made motion pictures filled with comedic outrageousness and vulgarity. He won an Academy Award for best screenplay for the movie The Producers (1968).